How to Avoid Probate Entirely: A Boca Raton Homeowner’s Starter Guide

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Probate is the court-supervised process of settling an estate, and in Florida it can take months and involve attorney fees and court costs. Many Boca Raton residents would rather their families skip it. The good news: with planning, most assets can pass to your loved ones without probate at all. Here is a first-timer’s overview of how that works in Florida.

Why People Want to Avoid Probate

Avoiding probate usually means a faster transfer, more privacy (probate files are public record at the Palm Beach County courthouse), and often lower cost. To be clear, avoiding probate does not avoid taxes, but Florida already has no state estate tax and no inheritance tax, so for most families the motivation is simply speed, privacy, and convenience.

Revocable Living Trusts

A revocable living trust, governed by Chapter 736 of the Florida Trust Code, is the workhorse of probate avoidance. You create the trust, transfer assets into it (your home, accounts, investments), and name yourself trustee while you are alive. When you pass, a successor trustee distributes everything according to your instructions, no court required. The catch: a trust only avoids probate for assets you actually retitle into it. An unfunded trust does nothing, which is the single most common mistake we see.

The Lady Bird Deed for Your Home

Florida is one of the states that recognizes the enhanced life estate deed, commonly called a Lady Bird deed. It lets you keep full control of your Boca Raton home during your life, including the right to sell or refinance, while naming who automatically receives it when you die. Because the transfer happens by operation of the deed, the home avoids probate. It also generally preserves your homestead protection and tax benefits during your lifetime, though the details matter and must be drafted correctly.

Beneficiary Designations: POD and TOD

Bank accounts can be set up as payable-on-death (POD), and brokerage accounts as transfer-on-death (TOD). Retirement accounts and life insurance pass by beneficiary designation too. These assets go directly to the named person and skip probate entirely. The key is keeping designations current, especially after a divorce, death, or new grandchild.

Joint Ownership With Survivorship

Property held as joint tenants with right of survivorship, or by spouses as tenancy by the entirety, passes automatically to the surviving owner. This is simple, but it has trade-offs: adding a child as a joint owner can expose your asset to that child’s creditors or divorce, so it is rarely the best tool on its own.

Don’t Forget Florida Homestead

Your homestead carries special constitutional protections and inheritance rules under Article X, Section 4. Some probate-avoidance moves can unintentionally conflict with homestead restrictions, particularly if you have a spouse or minor child. This is one area where a do-it-yourself approach often backfires for Boca Raton homeowners.

Talk to a Florida Estate Planning Attorney

The best plan depends on your assets, family, and goals, and the tools above only work when they are coordinated. This article is general information, not legal advice. Before you create a trust, sign a deed, or change beneficiary forms, consult a licensed Florida estate planning attorney to build a plan that actually keeps your family out of probate court.

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For more on our Florida practice, see our overview of Florida probate administration. Morgan Legal Group's affiliated New York office also handles .

DISCLAIMER: The information provided in this blog is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal advice. The content of this blog may not reflect the most current legal developments. No attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this blog or contacting Morgan Legal Group PLLP.

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